Quotes about Democracy
The ultimate victory of tomorrow is democracy, and through democracy with education, for no people in all the world can be kept eternally ignorant or eternally enslaved.
— Franklin D. Roosevelt
Majorities, no less than minorities, need the assurance that they are being treated fairly, otherwise they are sure to mobilize through democratic channels to affirm their interests. By not only tolerating but enshrining it in law, proportional representation is rapidly balkanizing the country along racial lines, destroying the confidence of citizens that the law will treat them equally and provoking a strong and largely justified backlash.
— Dinesh D'Souza
The morality of capitalism, just like the morality of democracy, is rooted in consent.
— Dinesh D'Souza
Democracy is a constant tension between truth and half-truth and, in the arsenal of truth, there is no greater weapon than fact.
— Lyndon B. Johnson
Our society is illuminated by the spiritual insights of the Hebrew prophets. America and Israel have a common love of human freedom, and they have a common faith in a democratic way of life.
— Lyndon B. Johnson
There can no longer be anyone too poor to vote.
— Lyndon B. Johnson
Equality in America has never meant literal equality of condition or capacity. There will always be inequalities in character and ability in any society. Equality has meant rather that in the words of the Declaration of Independence, All men are created equal and are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. It is meant that in a democratic society there should be no inequalities in opportunities or in freedoms.
— John F. Kennedy
All distinctions of birth or of rank have been abolished. All citizens, whether native or adopted, are placed upon terms of precise equality. All are entitled to equal rights and equal protection.
— James K. Polk
As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy.
— Abraham Lincoln
The equality of rights of all citizens is the basic tenet of modern democratic societies.
— Jacques Maritain
The democrats think that as they are equal they ought to be equal in all things.
— Aristotle
What the champions of suffrage understood was that the vote is not just a symbol of our equality, but that it can be, if used, a guarantee of results.
— Hillary Clinton